Crypto Law Profile

Canada CARF Income Tax Reporting Measures

Bill C-31 would add Part XXI to Canada’s Income Tax Act to implement OECD CARF, requiring reporting crypto-asset service providers to collect user tax-residence data and report covered crypto transactions to the CRA.

Canada In committee Bill

At a glance

Status In House committee after second reading on June 3, 2026.
Scope Applies to reporting crypto-asset service providers with a Canadian nexus.
Reporting Covers user tax-residence data, TINs, and aggregate crypto transaction values.
Timing Bill text applies proposed Part XXI to 2027 and later calendar years.

Overview

Canada’s Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework implementation measure is the crypto reporting portion of Bill C-31, the Budget 2025 Implementation Act, No. 2. As of June 8, 2026, Parliament lists the bill as at consideration in committee in the House of Commons after second reading and referral on June 3, 2026. The measure is not yet enacted. If passed as introduced, it would add Part XXI to the Income Tax Act and related Income Tax Regulations to implement the OECD Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework for Canadian tax information reporting.

What Canada’s CARF implementation would do

The proposal would move crypto-asset reporting into Canada’s federal income tax information-reporting system. The Department of Justice’s Charter Statement describes Part 1 of Bill C-31 as amending the Income Tax Act and Income Tax Regulations to implement CARF, creating new tax reporting obligations for platforms in respect of crypto-asset transactions undertaken by users. It would also adjust the Common Reporting Standard and Digital Platform Operators reporting rules to coordinate with CARF and reduce overlap.

Bill C-31’s first-reading text would insert a new Part XXI titled “Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework.” The proposed interpretation clause states that Part XXI relates to implementation of the CARF standard approved by the OECD Council and is to be read consistently with the framework and its official commentary, unless the context requires otherwise.

Covered crypto-asset service providers

The proposed rules apply to a “reporting crypto-asset service provider” that, as a business, provides services effectuating exchange transactions for or on behalf of customers, including as a counterparty, intermediary, or operator of a trading platform. The Canadian nexus rules would cover providers resident in Canada, entities organized under Canadian or provincial law with Canadian filing obligations, partnerships managed from Canada, and entities or individuals carrying on business in Canada.

Budget 2024 had described the intended scope as including crypto exchanges, crypto-asset brokers and dealers, and operators of crypto-asset automated teller machines. Bill C-31 also includes coordination rules where equivalent CARF obligations are completed in a partner jurisdiction, which is relevant for cross-border platform groups.

Reporting, due diligence, and recordkeeping

Under proposed section 298, reporting providers would report user identity and tax-residence information, including name, address, jurisdiction of residence, taxpayer identification number, and date of birth for reportable users. For entities with reportable controlling persons, the bill would require information on the entity and on each relevant controlling person.

Transaction reporting would be organized by user and type of relevant crypto-asset. Reportable data would include aggregate amounts and units for acquisitions and dispositions against fiat currency, crypto-to-crypto acquisitions and dispositions, reportable retail payment transactions, transfers to and from users, and certain transfers to wallet addresses not known to be associated with a virtual asset service provider or financial institution.

The due diligence provisions would require self-certifications to determine tax residence for individual and entity crypto-asset users, with reasonableness checks against information collected under AML/KYC procedures. For preexisting crypto-asset users, Bill C-31’s first-reading text requires completion of due diligence before 2028. Reporting providers would also have to keep records, including self-certifications and documentary evidence, for at least six years after the last relevant calendar year.

Status and expected timeline

Budget 2024 originally proposed CARF and related CRS amendments for the 2026 and subsequent calendar years, with first reporting and exchange in 2027. The later Bill C-31 text, however, applies the proposed Part XXI amendment to the 2027 and subsequent calendar years. If enacted in that form, the first annual information return would be due before May 2 of the year following the relevant reporting year, so the first filing window for 2027 data would close before May 2, 2028.

For CryptoSlate tracking, this profile should be treated as a Canadian federal bill in committee, focused on taxation and reporting. The measure is best tracked alongside Canada’s CRS amendments, CRA reporting guidance when issued, and OECD CARF implementation developments in partner jurisdictions.

Key provisions

Adds Income Tax Act Part XXI

Would insert Part XXI, titled Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework, and interpret it consistently with the OECD CARF standard and commentary.

Tax Reporting Jan 1, 2027 Source

Defines reporting providers

Covers business providers that effect crypto exchange transactions, act as counterparties or intermediaries, or make trading platforms available.

Provider Scope Jan 1, 2027 Source

Canadian nexus rules

Applies where a provider is resident in Canada, organized under Canadian law with filing obligations, managed from Canada, or carrying on business in Canada.

Tax Reporting Jan 1, 2027 Source

User and transaction reporting

Requires user identity, residence, TIN and transaction aggregates for fiat trades, crypto-to-crypto trades, retail payments, transfers and certain wallet transfers.

Tax Reporting Jan 1, 2027 Source

Due diligence and self-certification

Requires self-certifications, tax-residence review and reasonableness checks using information collected through AML/KYC procedures.

AML/KYC Jan 1, 2027 Source

Records, TINs and penalties

Requires electronic filing, six-year record retention, TIN production, TIN confidentiality and a $500 penalty for certain TIN failures.

Recordkeeping Jan 1, 2027 Source

Timeline

  1. Budget 2024 proposal

    Budget 2024 proposed CARF implementation and CRS coordination through Income Tax Act reporting rules.

    Proposed Source
  2. Draft legislation released

    Finance released draft Income Tax Act and regulations proposals for consultation, with comments due Sept. 12, 2025.

    Under consultation Source
  3. Bill C-31 first reading

    Bill C-31, Budget 2025 Implementation Act, No. 2, was introduced in the House of Commons.

    Introduced Source
  4. Referred to committee

    Second reading completed and Bill C-31 was referred to House committee.

    In committee Source

Who it affects

Actors

Canada Revenue Agency, Department of Finance Canada, OECD, Parliament of Canada

Asset classes

Crypto assets, NFTs, Stablecoins

Official sources

Editorial note

Profile covers the CARF-specific Income Tax Act and Income Tax Regulations measures in Bill C-31, not every Budget 2025 Implementation Act, No. 2 provision. Status and dates reflect the first-reading bill text and LEGISinfo as of June 8, 2026.